A blog devoted to the actors and public policy issues involved in the 1998 District of Columbia Court of Appeals decision in Freedman v. D.C. Department of Human Rights, an employment discrimination case.

Enclosed for your information is a letter to the U.S. Secret Service (dated June 12, 1995) that forwards to that agency a slightly revised version of my letter to the Office of U.S. Attorney, originally dated June 8, 1995.

The revisions to the letter dated June 8, 1995, a copy of which is enclosed, highlight certain factual omissions in Akin Gump's pleadings filed with the D.C. Department of Human Rights, the consistent pattern of which omissions suggests an intent to conceal.

Revisions to the letter dated June 8, 1995 are highlighted, and are found on page 2 (at paragraph 6); page 6 (n. 1 and n. 2); and APPENDIX A.

I note, incidentally, that my medical records on file at the George Washington University Medical Center attribute my paranoia to an inability to appraise complex fact patterns. A psychological test report prepared in about May 1994 and approved by staff psychologist William D. Fabian, Ph.D. states that I become easily confused when faced with a complex fact pattern and become "lost in a maze of facts." It is this same report that states that I lied on psychological testing in order to conceal my paranoia.